Source:
Public Affairs Alliance of Iranian Americans (PAAIA)
Proposal to assist democratic reformers in Iran
is proceeding through Congress
Washington, D.C. - In the midst of the fallout following the June 12th
presidential election in Iran, a bipartisan group of U.S. Senators went to work
trying to devise a strategy to help the people of Iran. The result of this
combined effort was the Victims of Iranian Censorship Act (VOICE).
According to Richard Fontaine, who at the time was an aide to Senator John
McCain: "We started thinking what can you do on the positive side, not to just
bombard Iran with messages from America, but to facilitate the kind of
remarkable political discussion the world had seen after these protests broke
out. Not as a regime-change thing, but in supporting the intrinsic values the
U.S. stands up for."
Under the proposed legislation, the VOICE Act, would establish the "Iranian
Electronic Education, Exchange, and Media Fund" to finance the creation of proxy
Web servers and Web addresses that would fall outside the reach of Iranian
government censorship. In doing so, it would allow Iranians free access to
information and the ability to stay in touch with the outside world anonymously.
The legislation would also authorize funding to the Broadcasting Board of
Governors to expand Farsi language broadcasting into Iran. The funds may be used
to also develop additional transmission capability to counter Iranian government
efforts to jam radio, satellite, and Internet-based transmissions.
The VOICE Act was introduced by Senators Ted Kaufman (D-DE), Robert Casey
(D-PA), John McCain (R-AZ), Lindsey Graham (R-SC), and Joe Lieberman (I-CT) in
July of 2009. It was passed on July 24, 2009 as part of the larger National
Defense Authorization Act of 2010. Currently, efforts are underway in both the
House and Senate to reconcile the various authorization bills and appropriate
the necessary money needed to fund the activities authorized in the VOICE Act.
Click
here to read the text of the VOICE Act
Related News:
Internet down in Iran ahead of planned protests - Most of the Iranian
capital's Internet links with the outside world were down on Saturday, two days
ahead of planned demonstrations by opponents of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.
Sources close to Iran's technical services told AFP the cut was the result of "a
decision by the authorities" rather than a technical breakdown, but
telecommunications ministry officials were unavailable for comment. -AFP
Massive
Student Protests Inside Iran Set for December 7 - Students inside of
Iran are set to hold major protests throughout the country on December 7th. In a
global expression of solidarity and support for the civil rights movement in
Iran, on December 12, 2009, events organized under the banner of ArtsUnited4Iran
will focus the world's attention on the grave situation of human rights in that
country.
... Payvand News - 12/05/09 ... --